Browse all articles from Volume 06:

Refractory Volume 6, 2004

Published Jun 17th 2004

Editor, Djoymi Baker.

CONTENTS

Fandom and Space: An Introduction [Editorial] - Djoymi Baker

Of Mounties and Gay Marriage: Canadian Television, American Fans, and the Virtual Heterotopia - Rhiannon Bury

Between Consumerism and Resistance, Outreach and Exclusion: Online Vampire Subcultures - Dale Hudson

Comrade Guy Unites the Happy Workers - Greg Levine

‘We was cross-dressing ‘afore you were born!’ Or, how sf fans invented virtual community - Helen Merrick

The Day Superman Changed - Michael G. Robinson

Slash Fandom on the Internet, Or, Is the Carnival Over? - Rachel Shave

Filed in Contents Page Only, Volume 06 | No responses yet

Fandom and Space: An Introduction [Editorial] - Djoymi Baker

Published Jun 17th 2004

Fan practices can forge new narrative spaces within and between the originating texts. In the contemporary era, conglomerate cross-media merchandising may attempt to cover all narrative and media fields. Fandom tests the boundaries of the text in often unsanctioned - even illegal - forms. Beyond the spatial conditions of initial reception, fandom extends textual engagement into new physical and virtual spaces. This issue of Refractory brings together papers that explore fandom in terms of its spatial dynamics, conceived broadly to encompass works addressing issues of internet culture, globalization, travel, private/public sphere, nationality, and commercial spaces.

Different spaces may produce quite different forms and levels of fan interaction, as Michael G. Robinson discovers in the case of the comic book store. Conversely, scholarly distinctions between spaces and media can sometimes obscure continuity between fans, as Helen Merrick explores through 1950s fandom. Dale Hudson finds that images in public spaces can be used to promote divergent ideologies, comparing Pepsi celebrity billboards with Chinese Communist Party posters. Despite reaching many countries, internet culture can nonetheless be the site of national identity, either one’s own, or that of another. Rhiannon Bury and Dale Hudson examine this issue in quite different contexts; Bury through American fans of the Canadian program Due South, and Hudson through vampire subcultures. Finally, Rachel Shave questions the need for physical proximity in her exploration of internet slash culture as a carnival space.

Each of these works suggests the need to consider fandom in its spatial, media, and historical contexts, considering both the distinct and continuous aspects between different forms of fandom. The overt and implied formation of fan communities links each of the works. We need to consider how the different spaces of fandom facilitate different forms of engagement between fans, and between fans and texts. How is identity formation through fandom affected by fan spaces? How do these different spaces impact on ethnographic observation of, and interaction with, fans? Spaces are not neutral, nor should they be seen as completely prescriptive.

In this issue of Refractory we invite you to journey to, from, and within different fan spaces, and to consider on your journey the way that space becomes fan place. Many of the articles are linked to fan sites on the web, so that you can weave your way between fandom and scholarly debates about fandom. Readers may also wish to look through previous and forthcoming editions of Refractory, for fandom papers in other contexts.

Author Biography

Djoymi Baker is currently completing her doctorate - entitled Broadcast Space: TV Culture, Myth and Star Trek - in the Cinema Studies Program at the University of Melbourne. Her dissertation examines representations and theories of myth in cross-media contexts (using the Star Trek franchise as a case study), including a consideration of fan pilgrimage to virtual and physical sites. Djoymi teaches cinema and television studies at the University of Melbourne, and her work has been published in Popular Culture Review and Refractory. She can be contacted on djoymib@unimelb.edu.au

Filed in Volume 06 | No responses yet

Of Mounties and Gay Marriage: Canadian Television, American Fans, and the Virtual Heterotopia - Rhiannon Bury

Published Jun 17th 2004

Rhiannon Bury argues examines the American fans of the Canadian television series, Due South (Paul Haggis, 1994-1998), via Militant RayK Separatists (MRKS), an electronic mailing list. Bury suggests that the MRKS is a heterotopic space, based on idealised notions of nationality.

Continue Reading »

Filed in Volume 06 | No responses yet

Between Consumerism and Resistance, Outreach and Exclusion: Online Vampire Subcultures - Dale Hudson

Published Jun 17th 2004

Dale Hudson explores online vampire subcultures as sites that articulate US national identity. Hudson argues that although they are ostensibly oppositional, vampire subcultures “are important sites for indoctrination into, and preservation of, national ideologies.”

Continue Reading »

Filed in Volume 06 | No responses yet

Comrade Guy Unites the Happy Workers - Greg Levine

Published Jun 17th 2004

Greg Levine, finding himself distracted by celebrity Pepsi billboards displayed in public spaces, suggests an alignment with propaganda posters of the Chinese Communist Party. Although ideologically antithetical, both use public images as role-modeling, to promote particular values.

Continue Reading »

Filed in Volume 06 | No responses yet

‘We was cross-dressing ‘afore you were born!’ Or, how sf fans invented virtual community - Helen Merrick

Published Jun 17th 2004

Helen Merrick notes that the term ‘virtual’ has become associated almost exclusively with contemporary technologies. However, Merrick suggests that ‘offline’ fan communities in the 1950s were “practicing similar forms of many-to-many communication” as their later online counterparts. Earlier forms of fandom were still able to connect members with a common interest, despite their geographical separation.

Continue Reading »

Filed in Volume 06 | No responses yet

The Day Superman Changed - Michael G. Robinson

Published Jun 17th 2004

Michael G. Robinson enters into the comic book store, and finds that it is a space that generates its own specific fan behaviour. Charting the release of Superman #123 in one local store as a case study, Robinson suggests that the dynamics fan interaction within this commercial zone highlights the need to consider different fan spaces on their own terms.

Continue Reading »

Filed in Volume 06 | No responses yet

Slash Fandom on the Internet, Or, Is the Carnival Over? - Rachel Shave

Published Jun 17th 2004

Rachel Shave applies the work of Mikhail Bakhtin to suggest that slash fandom on the Internet constitutes “a new, imagined, carnival space”. Using Harry Potter slash as her example, Shave argues that slash provides a transitory, resistant site where norms are playfully inverted.

Continue Reading »

Filed in Volume 06 | No responses yet